Two vacationing friends drown on trip to Florida

Longtime friendscaught by riptidein Gulf of Mexico

By Maki Becker
Updated: 05/21/08 9:16 AM

Mark Gutt, John Larry and Chris Gugliuzza on a
trip to the Bahamas in 2006. John and Chris drowned this week when they
were caught in a riptide while vacationing in Florida.

They left Buffalo on Sunday as three happy couples — headed south for what
was supposed to be a quick, relaxing vacation on the sun-soaked beaches of the
Florida barrier islands.

Tuesday, they flew back as two widows and just one intact couple, all
devastated by unforeseen tragedy.

On Monday, John Larry, 48, of Grand Island, and Christopher Gugliuzza, 52, of
the Town of Tonawanda, drowned off a beach in Longboat Key, Fla., as they were
taking an afternoon dip in the Gulf of Mexico.

An unrelenting riptide sucked the two men under water, killing them in just a
matter of a couple of minutes as their friends and other swimmers desperately
tried to save them, according to Florida rescuers.

“It’s unbelievable that anything like that could have happened so
quickly,” said Laura Gutt, who was among the vacationing sextet, after
returning to her home on Grand Island Tuesday. “It’s just horrible.”

Larry was an executive vice president and client manager in Bank of
America’s global corporate and investment bank division in Buffalo and was
involved in numerous local charities.

Gugliuzza was the owner of Aqua Sciences, an industrial water purification
business with offices in Hamburg and the Town of Tonawanda.

The three couples had known each other for decades. Gutt’s husband, Mark,
and Gugliuzza had been friends since they were 18 years old when they worked
together at a water company delivering tanks for dialysis machines.

The Gutts got to know Larry and his wife, Arlene, when they all stood up for
mutual friends at a wedding 25 years ago.

They were all close. The Gutts’ two sons and the Larrys’ three son would
call the adults “Uncle” and “Aunt.”

For the last 16 years, since after the Larrys’ youngest of three sons,
Michael, was born, the three couples had vacationed together annually. They went
to Jamaica and the Bahamas, but most years, they found themselves in Florida.

They always planned their yearly trip in late May or early June: Laura
Gutt’s birthday was on May 24, John and Jane Gugliuzzas’ wedding anniversary
was on May 30 and the Larrys’ was on June 6.

When the couples arrived in Florida Sunday morning, they found the weather a
little too overcast to hit the beach. Instead they enjoyed a lunch of grouper
sandwiches and creamy chowder at a restaurant and then relaxed at the condos
they’d rented just off the white sandy beach of Longboat Key, a narrow,
10-mile-long island.

Early Monday, it was still overcast and the wives headed out for a day of
shopping. They returned a little after 4 p.m. just as the men started talking
about whether they should go for a quick swim.

Laura Gutt recalled how John Larry had complained that he thought it was too
cold for swimming. “I don’t want to go in,” he said. “I don’t even
have a towel.”

Laura Gutt offered to get him one and the men headed toward the water. She
went to the condo office where beach towels were available for guests and spoke
for a couple of moments with a woman working there.

She said she headed back to the beach and saw a scene of panic unfolding in
front of her.

Her husband later explained to her that Larry and Gugliuzza had waded out
into the water ahead of him when they started to yell for help.

He quickly realized that his friends were in danger. They were caught in a
riptide, being pulled into deeper water and were having trouble keeping their
heads above water.

“Get on your back and go sideways!” he yelled to them. That’s how he
had learned to escape from the grasp of a riptide.

Mark Gutt reached out and managed to grab Gugliuzza’s hand for just a
second. But he slipped away. Gutt turned toward the beach and yelled for help.
He turned back around and his friends were gone.

Other beach-goers called 911 and dashed into the water and began trying to
save the men. A woman ran to the pool to get a life preserver. There she found
Jane Gugliuzza. “Are those people with you?” she asked. “It looks like
they’re in trouble.”

The woman ran back to the ocean and threw the ring out to the drowning men.

Mark Gutt and the other swimmers managed to drag the two men to the shore.
Moments later Longboat Key Fire Rescue workers arrived. They found the two men
unresponsive, with no pulse and not breathing. They began full rescue measures
and continued their efforts as the two men were rushed by ambulance to Sarasota
Memorial Hospital. It was too late; nothing could be done.

Tuesday morning, Arlene Larry, Jane Gugliuzza, and Mark and Laura Gutt made
the heartbreaking trip back to Buffalo.

Arlene Larry was holding up as best she could, Laura Gutt said, trying to put
on a brave face for her three sons: Mark, 22, a student at St. Bonaventure
University; Christopher, 20, a student at John Carroll University; and Michael,
16, a student at St. Joseph’s Collegiate Institute.

“She’s trying to be so strong for them,” Gutt said. “She’s all
they’ve got. She wants them to see that she’s strong.”

Jane Gugliuzza was heartbroken and was being comforted Tuesday afternoon by a
family friend, John LaFalce. “We’re in disbelief,” he said.

He remembered Gugliuzza as a kind and generous man. “He was a very giving
person,” he said. “People just have nothing but great things to say about
Chris.”

The Gugliuzzas did not have children, so they doted on their friends’ kids
as if they were their own, Laura Gutt said.

Mark Gutt was taking the deaths of his friends especially hard, his wife
said. “My husband feels he should be gone, too.”

The two widows spent Tuesday going about the sad task of making arrangements
to have their husbands’ bodies flown back to Buffalo and for the funeral
services.

“It’s devastating and life-changing,” Laura Gutt said. “But
hopefully, as Arlene keeps saying, they’re in a better place now . . .
Hopefully, we can think that way.”